Quote from kjkent1:
That was quite a mouthful, however it does not address my question or the issue.
Exodus 21 deals with the ownership of other persons as property. If God's law is perfect, as is stated in Psalms 19:7, and Moses gave the Hebrews God's law concerning the treatment those persons who were the property of others, then that law must also be perfect.
The inescapable conclusion to be drawn is that God condones the ownership of people as property of other people, i.e., slavery.
If this were not the case, then God would have commanded that the Hebrews set their slaves free, just as Pharaoh was commanded to set the Hebrews free.
But, God did not do so. Therefore, God condoned the Hebrews' ownership of slaves.
During the U.S. Civil War, advocates of the antebellum movement used Exodus 21 as a rationale for the maintenance of slavery. This same rationale continued to prevail in the South and has been advanced by many political leaders throughout U.S. history as a moral theory which advocates that slavery is condoned by God, under the Rules stated in Exodus 21.
The rationale continues to this day within the membership of the Ku Klux Klan.
My opinion of the above is simply that the Bible is not a perfect rendering, but is rather an interpretation by the men who wrote it, and therefore it cannot be read as the literal revealed truth of the Almighty.
If you are sincerely interested in teaching me what you believe and why, I would appreciate your direct response to the issue, rather than by means of allegory.
You do not understand ancient history nor the ancient customs of that day. Get back to me when you fully comprehend the times of the old testament. Until then you will continue to rationalize the text and force your opinion on it rather than extracting from it.
You have shown that you don't read the Bible and you don't understand it. You should first study up on a subject instead of comming off as if you know it all and have studied to show yourself approved.